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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Khalīl ibn Aybak al-Ṣafadī, or Ṣalaḥ al-Dīn al-Ṣafadī (Arabic: صلاح الدين الصَّفديّ; full name - Ṣalaḥ al-Dīn Abū al-Ṣafa Khalīl ibn Aybak ibn ‘Abd Allāh al-Albakī al-Ṣafari al-Damascī Shafi'i. (1296 – 1363); he was a Turkic[1] Mamluk author and historian. He studied under the historian and Shafi'i scholar, al-Dhahabi.

He was born in Safad, Palestine under Mamluk rule. His wealthy family afforded him a broad education, memorising the Qur’ān and reciting the books of Ḥadīth. He excelled in the social sciences of grammar, language, philology and calligraphy. He painted on canvas, and was especially passionate about literature. He taught himself poetry, its systems, transmitters and meters.

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Transcription

His teachers

Among Ṣafadī’s many teachers from Safad, Damascus, Cairo and Aleppo were:

Books

  • Ikhtirāʿ al-Khurāʿ ("Invention of Absurdity"); on scholastic pedantry, a satirical work in the tradition of Arabic parodies, it is one of his most famous works.[2]
  • Kitāb al-Wāfī bi-l-Wafayāt (كتاب الوافي بالوفيات) (29 vols.);[3][4] biographical dictionary of notable people.
  • Nakt al-Humyān fī Nukat al-Umyān, biographies of notable blind people, with a section on the causes of blindness.[5]
  • Al-Ghayth al-Musajam fi Sharh Lamiyyat-Ajam (Flowing Desert Rains in the Commentary upon the L-Poem of the Non-Arabs);[6] an encyclopedic commentary on Togharayi's Lamiyyat al-Ajam.
  • al-Ḥusn aṣ-ṣarīḥ fī miʾat malīḥ ('Pure Beauty: on one hundred handsome lads'), also a solo-authored maqāṭīʿ-collection composed between 1337 and 1338[7]: 43 
  • Al-Rawḍ al-bāsim wa-l-ʿarf an-nāsim ('The Smiling Garden and the Wafting Fragrance'), a 444-poem solo-authored maqāṭīʿ-collection in forty-six chapters composed sometime before 1355[7]: 43–44 
  • Alḥān as-sawājiʿ bayn al-bādī wa-l-murājiʿ ('Tunes of Cooing Doves, between the Initiator and Responder [in Literary Correspondence]'), an epistolary anthology[7]: 42 
  • Kashf al-ḥāl fī waṣf al-khāl ('Revealing the Situation about Describing Beauty Marks')[7]: 44 
  • Rashf al-zulāl fī waṣf al-hilāl ('A Sip of Pure Water: describing the crescent moon')[7]: 44 
  • Ladhdhat al-samʿ fī waṣf al-dam ('Pleasing the Ears by Describing the Tears'), also known as Kitāb Tashnīf as-samʿ bi-nsikāb ad-damʿ[7]: 44 

Notes

The Internet Archive hosts a copy of كتاب الوافي بالوفيات (Kitab Al-Wafi Bi-Al-Wafayat) at https://archive.org/details/FP49931.

References

  1. ^ Rosenthal, Franz. "al-Ṣafadī".
  2. ^ Tuttle, Kelly (2013). "Play and display: al-Ṣafadī's Invention of Absurdity". Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies. 4 (3): 364–378. doi:10.1057/pmed.2013.22. S2CID 170228506.
  3. ^ Rowson, E.K. (2009). Essays in Arabic Literary Biography. Weisbaden: Harrassowitz-Verlag. pp. 341–357.
  4. ^ aṣ-Ṣafadī, Salah al-Dīn (2000), ʻAdnān al-Baḫīt, Muḥammạd (ed.), "Al-Wāfī bi-'l-wafayāt", Bibliotheca Islamica (in Arabic), 29, Beirut: Dar Ehia al-Tourath al-Arabi
  5. ^ Saliba, George (1994). A History of Arabic Astronomy: Planetary Theories During the Golden Age of Islam. New York: New York University Press. pp. 35, 53, 61.
  6. ^ Muhanna, Elias (2017). The World in a Book: Al-Nuwayri and the Islamic Encyclopedic Tradition. Princeton University Press. p. 52. ISBN 9780691175560.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Adam Talib, How Do You Say “Epigram” in Arabic? Literary History at the Limits of Comparison, Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures, 40 (Leiden: Brill, 2018); ISBN 978-90-04-34996-4.

External links


This page was last edited on 5 March 2024, at 17:50
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